SPLC interim CEO testifies amid federal indictment allegations

Bryan Fair, interim president and CEO of the Southern Poverty Law Center, appeared before the House Judiciary Committee on Tuesday. He faced questions from Chairman Jim Jordan about a superseding federal indictment alleging misuse of donor funds.

Fair repeatedly declined to answer yes-or-no questions directly, referring instead to counsel in the Middle District of Alabama. The indictment claims the organization paid field sources a total of $4 million to infiltrate extremist groups, host rallies, recruit members, and purchase materials for events including cross burnings. It also names several alleged shell companies used to obscure payments. Fair acknowledged that the group ran the program to protect our staff and to protect the public and confirmed that it has since announced plans to shut it down. He attributed a jump in donations from $51 million to $133 million to the 2016 election rather than the 2017 Charlottesville rally, where the indictment alleges one paid source helped coordinate transportation. Alveda King, niece of Martin Luther King Jr., also testified at the hearing. She called for transparency and accountability in how donor funds are used, stating that Americans deserve transparency and accountability about how those funds are being used.

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Dramatic illustration of Southern Poverty Law Center's federal indictment for allegedly funding KKK and neo-Nazi informants.
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Southern Poverty Law Center indicted on federal fraud charges for funding extremists

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A federal grand jury in Alabama's Middle District indicted the Southern Poverty Law Center on 11 counts, including wire fraud, false statements to banks, and conspiracy to conceal money laundering, for allegedly funneling over $3 million from 2014 to 2023 to informants in groups like the Ku Klux Klan, Aryan Nations, and National Alliance. Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche accused the nonprofit of 'manufacturing the extremism it purports to oppose by paying sources to stoke racial hatred.'

Ayaan Hirsi Ali, once labeled an 'anti-Muslim extremist' by the Southern Poverty Law Center, celebrated this week's federal indictment of the nonprofit on fraud charges in an opinion piece, calling it a long-overdue reckoning. The charges allege the SPLC diverted over $3 million in donor funds to informants tied to hate groups from 2014-2023—details covered in prior reporting.

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The Trump administration has brought new indictments against former FBI Director James Comey and the Southern Poverty Law Center as part of what critics describe as a revenge campaign against political enemies. These charges follow previous efforts targeting figures like New York Attorney General Letitia James. Prosecutors have used broad federal statutes and grand jury powers in these cases.

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The National Prosecuting Authority has appeared to step back from its earlier admission of political interference in apartheid-era prosecutions. This shift emerged during cross-examination at the Khampepe inquiry on 25 May. Former president Thabo Mbeki is also challenging a summons to testify before the same panel.

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